Organic Name Reactions for the students and aspirants of Chemistry12th.pptx
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Extremophiles
1. EXTREMOPHILES
I. What are they?
II. Types of Extremophiles
III. Extreme Prokaryotes
IV. Extreme Eukaryotes
V. Extreme Viruses
VI. Evolution of Extremophiles
VII. Biotechnological Uses
VIII. Industrial Uses
IX. Extraterrestrial Extremophiles?
2. What are Extremophiles?
Extremophiles are microorganismsâ whether
viruses, prokaryotes, or eukaryotesâ that survive
under harsh environmental conditions that can
include atypical temperature, pH, salinity, pressure,
nutrient, oxic, water, and radiation levels
4. Types of Extremophiles
Other types include:
âą Barophiles -survive under high pressure levels, especially in deep
sea vents
âą Osmophiles âsurvive in high sugar environments
âą Xerophiles -survive in hot deserts where water is scarce
âą Anaerobes -survive in habitats lacking oxygen
âą Microaerophiles -survive under low-oxygen conditions only
âą Endoliths âdwell in rocks and caves
âą Toxitolerants -organisms able to withstand high levels of damaging
agents. For example, living in water saturated with benzene, or in
the water-core of a nuclear reactor
5. THERMOPHILES
ï¶ Structural Adaptations
ïLipid Bilayer Structure
ï¶ Cellular Adaptations
ïMolecular Chaperones
ïHistone-like DNA Binding Proteins
ï¶ Molecular Adaptations
ïExcess glutamate, valine, tyrosine,
& proline residues
ïSalt-bridges, packing density etc.
HALOPHILES
ï¶ Structural Adaptations
ïLipid Bilayer Structure
ï¶ Cellular Adaptations
ïSalt-in Cytoplasm Strategy
ïCompatible Solute Strategy
ï¶ Molecular Adaptations
ïExcess acidic amino acids on
protein surface
Halothermophiles
Do they exist, than their limits to life??
What Adaptation Strategies??
What Adaptation mechanisms??
9. Morphology of Hyperthermophiles
-Heat stable proteins that have more hydrophobic
interiors, which prevents unfolding or
denaturation at higher temperatures
-Have chaperonin proteins that maintain folding
-Monolayer membranes of dibiphytanyl tetraethers,
consisting of saturated fatty acids which confer
rigidity, preventing them from being degraded in
high temperatures
-Have a variety of DNA-preserving substances that
reduce mutations and damage to nucleic acids,
such as reverse DNA gyrase and Sac7d
-They can live without sunlight or organic carbon as
food, and instead survive on sulfur, hydrogen,
and other materials that other organisms cannot
metabolize
The red on these rocks
is produced by
Sulfolobus solfataricus,
near Naples, Italy
11. Deep Sea Extremophiles
The deep-sea floor and hydrothermal vents
involve the following conditions:
low temperatures (2-3Âș C) â where only
psychrophiles are present
low nutrient levels â where only oligotrophs
present
high pressures â which increase at the rate of
1 atm for every 10 meters in depth (as we
have learned, increased pressure leads to
decreased enzyme-substrate binding)
barotolerant microorganisms live at
1000-4000 meters
barophilic microorganisms live at
depths greater than 4000 metersA black smoker, a submarine
hot spring, which can reach
518- 716°F (270-380°C)
12. Extremophiles of Hydrothermal Vents
A cross-section of a bacterium
isolated from a vent. Often
such bacteria are filled with
viral particles which are
abundant in hydrothermal
vents
A bacterial
community from a
deep-sea
hydrothermal vent
near the Azores
Natural
springs which
vent warm or
hot water on
the sea floor
near mid-
ocean ridges.
Associated
with the
spreading of
the earthâs
crust. High
temperatures
and pressures
Â
0.2”m 1”m
13. Psychrophiles
Some microorganisms
thrive in temperatures
well below the
freezing point of
water, such as in
AntarcticaSome researchers believe that
psychrophiles live in conditions mirroring
those found on Mars
14. Psychrophiles possess:
-proteins rich in α-helices and polar groups which allow for greater
flexibility
-âantifreeze proteinsâ that maintain liquid intracellular conditions by
lowering freezing points of other biomolecules
-membranes that are more fluid, containing unsaturated cis-fatty acids
which help to prevent freezing
-active transport at lower temperatures
15. Halophiles
-Divided into mild (1-6%NaCl), moderate (6-15%NaCl), and extreme
(15-30%NaCl)
-Halophiles are mostly obligate aerobic archaea
How do halophiles survive high salt concentrations?
-by interacting more strongly with water such as using more
negatively charged amino acids in key structures
-by making many small proteins inside the cell, and these, then,
compete for the water
-and by accumulating high levels of salt in the cell in order to
outweigh the salt outside
16. Barophiles
-Survive under levels
of pressure that are
otherwise lethal to
other organisms
-Usually found deep in
the earth, in the deep
sea, hydrothermal
vents, etc
-scientists believe that
barophiles may be
able to survive on the
Moon and other places
in space
A sample of barophilic
bacteria from the
earthâs interior
1”m
17. Xerophiles
Extremophiles which live in water-
scarce habitats, such as deserts
Produce desert varnish as seen
in the image to the left
Desert varnish is a thin coating of
Mn, Fe, and clay on the surface of
desert rocks, formed by colonies
of bacteria living on the rock
surface for thousands of years
18. SOME COMMON GENERA OF PROKARYOTE EXTREMOPHILES
Thermotoga Aquifex Halobacterium
Methanosarcina Thermoplasma Thermococcus
Thermoproteus Pyrodictium Ignicoccus
2um 1.8um 1um
0.6um 0.9um 0.9um
1.3um 0.6um
0.7um
19. Deinococcus radiodurans
The Radiation Resistor
-Possesses extreme resistance to
up to 4 million rad of radiation,
genotoxic chemicals (those that
harm DNA), oxidative damage from
peroxides/superoxides, high levels
of ionizing and ultraviolet
radiation, and dehydration
-It has from four to ten DNA
molecules compared to only one
for most other bacteria
-Contains many DNA repair enzymes, such as RecA, which
matches the shattered pieces of DNA and splices them back
together. During these repairs, cell-building activities are shut off
and the broken DNA pieces are kept in place
0.8”m
20. Chroococcidiopsis
The Cosmopolitan Extremophile
-A cyanobacteria which can survive in a variety of harsh
environments, such as hot springs, hypersaline habitats, hot,
arid deserts throughout the world, and in the frigid Ross
Desert in Antarctica
-Possesses a variety of enzymes which assist in such
adaptation
1.5”m
21. Other Prokaryotic Extremophiles
Gallionella ferrugineaand
(iron bacteria), from a cave
Anaerobic bacteria
1”m 1”m
Current efforts in microbial taxonomy are isolating more and
more previously undiscovered extremophile species, in places
where life was least expected
23. EXTREME EUKARYOTES
PSYCHROPHILES
Snow Algae (Chlamydomonas nivalis) A bloom of Chloromonas
rubroleosa in Antarctica
These algae have successfully adapted to their harsh
environment through the development of a number of
adaptive features which include pigments to protect against
high light, polyols (sugar alcohols, e.g. glycerine), sugars
and lipids (oils), mucilage sheaths, motile stages and spore
2”m
24. EXTREME EUKARYOTES
ENDOLITHS
Quartzite from Johnson
Canyon, California.
Sample shows green
bands of endolithic
algae. Rock is 9.5 cm
wide
-Endoliths (also called hypoliths) are usually
algae, but can also be prokaryotic cyanobacteria,
that exist within rocks and caves
-Often are exposed to anoxic (no oxygen) and
anhydric (no water) environments
25. EXTREME EUKARYOTES
PARASITES
-Members of the Phylum Protozoa, which are regarded as
the earliest eukaryotes to evolve, are mostly parasites
-Parasitism is often a stressful relationship on both host
and parasite, so they are considered extremophiles
Trypanosoma gambiense,
causes African sleeping
sickness
Balantidium coli, causes
dysentery-like symptoms
15”m
20”m
26. EXTREME VIRUSES
Virus-like particles
isolated from the extreme
environment of
Yellowstone National Park
hot springs
Viruses are currently being
isolated from habitats where
temperatures exceed 200°F
Instead of the usual
icosahedral or rod-shaped
capsids that known viruses
possess, researchers have
found viruses with novel
propeller-like structures
These extreme viruses often
live in hyperthermophile
prokaryotes such as
Sulfolobus
40nm
27. -Members of Domain Bacteria (such as Aquifex and
Thermotoga) that are closer to the root of the âtree of
lifeâ tend to be hyperthermophilic extremophiles
-The Domain Archaea contain a multitude of extremophilic
species:
Phylum Euryarchaeota-consists of methanogens and
extreme halophiles
Phylum Crenarchaeota-consists of thermoacidophiles,
which are extremophiles that live in hot, sulfur-rich, and
acidic solfatara springs
Phylum Korarchaeota-new phylum of yet uncultured
archaea near the root of the Archaea branch, all are
hyperthermophiles
-Most extremophilic members of the Domain Eukarya are
red and green algae
PHYLOGENETIC RELATIONSHIPS
28. The First Organisms?
Early Earth was largely inhospitable: high CO2/H2S/H2 etc,
low oxygen, and high temperatures
Lifeforms that could evolve in such an environment needed
to adapt to these extreme conditions
H2 was present in abundance in the early atmosphere.
Many hyperthermophiles and archaea are H2 oxidizers
Thus, it is widely held that extremophiles represent the
earliest forms of life with non-extreme forms evolving
after cyanobacteria had accumulated enough O2 in the
atmosphere
Results of rRNA and other molecular techniques have
placed hyperthermophilic bacteria and archaea at the
roots of the phylogenetic tree of life
29. Evolutionary Theories
âą Consortia- symbiotic relationships between microorganisms, allows
more than one species to exist in extreme habitats because one
species provides nutrients to the others and vice versa
âą Genetic drift appears to have played a major role in how
extremophiles evolved, with allele frequencies randomly changing in
a microbial population. So alleles that conferred adaptation to harsh
habitats increased in the population, giving rise to extremophile
populations
âą Geographic isolation may also be a significant factor in extremophile
evolution. Microorganisms that became isolated in more extreme
areas may have evolved biochemical and morphological
characteristics which enhanced survival as opposed to their relatives
in more temperate areas. This involves genetic drift as well
30. Slower Evolution
-Extremophiles, especially hyperthermophiles, possess slow
âevolutionary clocksâ
-That is, they have not evolved much from their ancestors
as compared to other organisms
-Hence, hyperthermophiles today are similar to
hyperthermophiles of over 3 billion years ago
-Slower evolution may be the direct result of living in
extreme habitats and little competition
-By contrast, other extremophiles, such as extreme
halophiles and psychrophiles, appear to have undergone
faster modes of evolution since they live in more
specialized habitats that are not representative of early
earth conditions
31. Mat Consortia
-Microbial mats consist of an upper layer of photosynthetic
bacteria, with a lower layer of nonphotosynthetic bacteria
-These consortia may explain some of the evolution that has
taken place: extremophiles may have relied on other
extremophiles and non-extremophiles for nutrients and shelter
-Hence, evolution could have been cooperative
A mat
consortia in
Yellowstone
Mat Consortia
32. USES OF EXTREMOPHILES
HYPERTHERMOPHILES (SOURCE) USES
DNA polymerases DNA amplification by PCR
Alkaline phosphatase Diagnostics
Proteases and lipases Dairy products
Lipases, pullulanases and proteases Detergents
Proteases Baking and brewing and amino
acid production from keratin
Amylases, α-glucosidase, pullulanase and xylose/glucose isomerases
Baking and brewing and amino
acid production from keratin
Alcohol dehydrogenase Chemical synthesis
Xylanases Paper bleaching
Lenthionin Pharmaceutical
S-layer proteins and lipids Molecular sieves
Oil degrading microorganisms Surfactants for oil recovery
Sulfur oxidizing microorganisms Bioleaching, coal & waste gas
desulfurization
Hyperthermophilic consortia Waste treatment and methane
production
33. USES OF EXTREMOPHILES
PSYCHROPHILES (SOURCE) USES
Alkaline phosphatase Molecular biology
Proteases, lipases, cellulases and amylases
Detergents
Lipases and proteases Cheese manufacture and dairy
production
Proteases Contact-lens cleaning solutions,
meat tenderizing
Polyunsaturated fatty acids Food additives, dietary
supplements
Various enzymes Modifying flavors
b-galactosidase Lactose hydrolysis in milk
products
Ice nucleating proteins Artificial snow, ice cream, other
freezing applications in the food
industry
Ice minus microorganisms Frost protectants for
sensitive plants
Various enzymes (e.g. dehydrogenases)
Biotransformations
Various enzymes (e.g. oxidases)Bioremediation, environmental
biosensors
Methanogens Methane production
34. USES OF EXTREMOPHILES
HALOPHILES (SOURCE) USES
Bacteriorhodopsin Optical switches and photocurrent generators in
bioelectronics
Polyhydroxyalkanoates Medical plastics
Rheological polymers Oil recovery
Eukaryotic homologues (e.g. myc oncogene product)
Cancer detection, screening anti-tumor drugs
Lipids Liposomes for drug delivery and cosmetic
packaging
Lipids Heating oil
Compatible solutes Protein and cell protectants in variety of
industrial uses, e.g. freezing, heating
Various enzymes, e.g. nucleases, amylases, proteases
Various industrial uses, e.g. flavoring agents
g-linoleic acid, b-carotene and cell extracts, e.g. Spirulina and Dunaliella
Health foods, dietary supplements, food coloring
and feedstock
Microorganisms Fermenting fish sauces and modifying food
textures and flavors
Microorganisms Waste transformation and degradation, e.g.
hypersaline waste brines contaminated with a
wide range of organics
Membranes Surfactants for pharmaceuticals
35. USES OF EXTREMOPHILES
ALKALIPHILES (SOURCE) USES
Proteases, cellulases, xylanases, lipases and pullulanases
Detergents
Proteases Gelatin removal on X-ray
film
Elastases, keritinases Hide dehairing
Cyclodextrins Foodstuffs, chemicals and
pharmaceuticals
Xylanases and proteases Pulp bleaching
Pectinases Fine papers, waste
treatment and degumming
Alkaliphilic halophiles Oil recovery
Various microorganisms Antibiotics
ACIDOPHILES (SOURCE) USES
Sulfur oxidizing microorganisms Recovery of metals and
desulfurication of coal
Microorganisms Organic acids and solvents
36. Taq Polymerase
Isolated from the
hyperthermophile
Thermus aquaticus
Much more heat stable
Used as the DNA
polymerase in the very
useful Polymerase
Chain Reaction (PCR)
technique which
amplifies DNA samples
37. Alcohol Dehydrogenase
-Alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH), is derived
from a member of the archaea called
Sulfolobus solfataricus
-It works under some of nature's harshest
volcanic conditions: It can survive to 88°C
(190ÂșF) - nearly boiling - and corrosive acid
conditions (pH=3.5) approaching the sulfuric
acid found in a car battery (pH=2)
-ADH catalyzes the conversion of alcohols
and has considerable potential for
biotechnology applications due to its
stability under these extreme conditions
39. Bioremediation
- Bioremediation is the branch of biotechnology that
uses biological processes to overcome environmental
problems
- Bioremediation is often used to degrade xenobiotics
introduced into the environment through human
error or negligence
- Part of the cleanup effort after the 1989 Exxon Valdez
oil spill included microorganisms induced to grow via
nitrogen enrichment of the contaminated soil
41. Psychrophiles as Bioremediators
- Bioremediation applications with cold-adapted
enzymes are being considered for the degradation
of diesel oil and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)
- Health effects that have been associated with
exposure to PCBs include acne-like skin conditions
in adults and neurobehavioral and immunological
changes in children. PCBs are known to cause
cancer in animals
42. An End to Pollution?
New and innovative methods are being developed
that utilize extremophiles for the elimination of
pollution resulting from oil slicks, toxic chemical
spills, derelict mines, etc
43. Life in Outer Space?
-Scientists have decided on 3 requirements for life:
water
energy
carbon
-Astrobiology: field of biology dealing with the existence of life beyond
earth
-Astrobiologists are currently looking for life on Mars, Jupiterâs moon
Europa, and Saturnâs moon Titan
-Such life is believed to consist of extremophiles that can withstand the
cold and pressure differences
-Mudslide-like formations have been
found on Mars (left). These appear to
have been caused by water
movements. Psychrophiles may exist
there
Image courtesy of the Current Science & Technology Center
44. Life in Outer Space?
-Europa is thought to have an ice
crust shielding a 30-mile deep
ocean. Reddish cracks (left) are
visible in the ice and may be
evidence of living populations
-Titan is enveloped with a hazy
gas (left) that is believed to
contain some organic
molecules, ie methane. This
may provide sustenance for life
on Titanâs surface
Images courtesy of the Current Science & Technology Center
45. Life in Outer Space?
-Scientists have found that
meteorites contain amino
acids and simple sugars,
very important building
blocks. These may serve
to spread life throughout
the universe
Image courtesy of the Current Science & Technology Center
-A sample of stratospheric
air had shown a myriad of
bacterial diversity 41 km
above the earthâs surface
(Lloyd, Harris, & Narlikar,
2001)
Indeed, we may not be alone
46. CONCLUSIONS
-Extremophiles are a very important and integral part of the
earthâs biodiversity
They:
- reveal much about the earthâs history and origins of life
- possess amazing capabilities to survive in the extremes
- are proving to be beneficial to both humans and the
environment
-may exist beyond earth
Editor's Notes
âSignificant deficiency in knowledge warrants investigationâ
âSo we asked the question⊠what would occur in combination extremophilesâ
Bioenergetics / evolution suggests a certain bias
Stronger towards thermophily / halophily?
Nothing known becauseâŠ
Do these organisms exist?